But when Liam launched his first band Beady Eye after the split of Oasis in 2009, he was playing venues like Manchester Academy and the Hammersmith Apollo in London. And the star was worried that he'd be back playing smaller shows as a solo star.

Liam Gallagher and John Kennedy, Radio X.
Picture:
Matt Crossick/PA

He told Radio X’s John Kennedy: “I thought it’d be a Beady Eye kind of thing… which was not acceptable.

“That ain’t good enough for me. I thought, if it’s like that, I’m packing it in. It needs to be BIG - if it’s not big, it doesn’t fit right for me, you know what I mean?”

He went on: “Playing them clubs with Beady Eye… as much as it was great, it was fucking hard work. It just wasn’t right, man. It felt weird.

“Maybe it felt weird cos Noel weren’t there? We were giving it as much as we could, it just felt odd."

“So I thought, if it’s gonna be like this I need to start sewing. Get meself down to Pretty Green and get a few buttons on a few jackets.

“It has to go off for me to really fucking want it. And it did, thank the Lord.”

Thankfully, Liam’s solo career started with a Number 1 album, As You Were, and a series of sold-out, high profile live shows, including an appearance at Ariana Grande’s One Love Manchester date in June to pay tribute to the victims of the Manchester terror attack last year.

Now Liam is looking forward to 2018: “It feels right for me to be playing Finsbury Park and the Cricket Ground and doing all these arenas.